Until now Polaris had been Automattic’s largest investor, and second largest shareholder. Mike Hirshland wrote the biggest checks in our 2006 and 2008 rounds (the only primary capital Automattic has raised) and served on our board until 2011 when he left the firm and we were lucky to be joined by Dave Barrett. Over the years I’ve had the pleasure of spending time and getting great feedback from a number of people associated with the firm including Ryan Spoon, Bob Metcalfe, Steve Arnold, and Alan Spoon. Although they’ll no longer be on the board Polaris will continue to be a major shareholder, retaining about a third of their stake. Now that Automattic has been locked in as a win for their portfolio I hope they’ll continue to be involved for many years to come.

I’m glad to be even more fully aligned with Tiger. I think it says a lot to their excitement in the company that just a few months after joining the family and learning more about the company they significantly increased their stake, and at a significant bump in valuation. Their deep resources, market experience, and long-term outlook make them an ideal partner for the next phase of Automattic and the continued growth of the WordPress ecosystem. What we’re building will take time and it won’t be easy, but things worth doing seldom are.

Yikes, it almost seems y’all want to be serious business and such! More seriously, I am also very happy to see a solidly grounded open source enterprise on which an ever growing share of the internet relies also proving itself as attractive for both serious investors and entrepreneurs. There’s plenty of room for growth, and I love the WP ecosystem dearly enough to applaud seeing WP growing along with it. Here’s to another, what, umpteen years? And while I’m still here: thanks, Matt, for shepherding this puppy along so well, all that time.

Well Tiger sure knows where the market goes. There still is huge upward potential since the flagship WordPress has become fairly well established as a CMS system by now and God knows how many companies and bloggers are actually already planning still to migrate. We ain’t seen nothing yet. This will add another round of extensions, add-ons, plugins and so on. It’s amazing how WordPress and Automattic have created a lifelihood for so many people and for others made life just easier to say the least. Reminds me a bit of how a proper supports makes “opportunistic” climbers flourish in a garden.